The Guardian (USA)

Scandal’s Kerry Washington: ‘My mother’s nightmare was for me to be a starving actress’

- Ellen E Jones

In a rational world, somewhere deep in the Democratic National Committee headquarte­rs, a small staff would be hard at work planning Kerry Washington’s presidenti­al bid. “Washington 2028: Tough on Scandal” or “2032: Ms Kerry Goes to Washington” – the slogans just write themselves. Whether Washington could be persuaded to run for office is another matter. She is, she insists when we meet via a video call, too self-effacing for politics. “I feel you really have to decide that you’re the one, like: ‘I’m the one to solve this problem!’”

She is much more comfortabl­e directing attention elsewhere. “For most of my career, I was really a character actor,” she says. “People didn’t connect that the girl from Ray was the same girl from Last King of Scotland, was the same girl from Save the Last Dance. And I loved that, because I got to disappear into these other people and it wasn’t about me.”

Then, in 2012, the political thriller Scandal came along, and Washington became the first black woman to lead a US network drama since Teresa Graves played an undercover cop in Get Christie Love!, in 1974. The role of Olivia Pope, a high-powered DC fixer, kept Washington in the spotlight for seven seasons. “The year we came out, that’s all anybody talked about,” she says with a slight eye-roll, before trying to play down the achievemen­t. “But if I hadn’t done it, Viola [Davis] would have, Priyanka [Chopra] would have, Simone [Missick] would have. Audiences were ready for it.”

Blame nominative determinis­m, if you like, but the notion that Washington is destined for a career in politics is difficult to shake. This is partly because of Scandal’s huge cultural impact, although even Washington’s less overtly political roles – such as this year’s Little Fires Everywhere, in which she played a nomadic artist locked into a bizarre rivalry with Reese Witherspoo­n’s strait-laced, suburban “supermom” – speak to the current divide in US society.

Lots of actors have a political drama or two in their back catalogue. Not so many are willing to get involved on the ground. Washington, though, has been stumping for the Joe Biden/Kamala Harris campaign for months, has been a regular on the podium at Democratic party events since her first conference speech in 2012, and is particular­ly vocal in her support for vice-president-elect Harris. “I’ve known Kamala a very long time,” she says. “I hosted fundraiser­s for her, back when she was running for attorney general in California [in 2010]. She’s a spectacula­r human being.”

Of course, Harris is now poised to become the first female vice-president of the US. Having worked so hard to achieve this outcome, will Washington allow herself a moment to celebrate? Maybe a brief one. Celebratio­n “helps to refuel us for the ongoing work,” she says, “but the work is absolutely ongoing. Often, we forget that democracy is work and that it requires all of us.”

For those who do fancy a moment of respite, Washington is coming to Netflix UK on 11 December in Ryan Murphy’s new musical, The Prom. Washington describes her on-set experience as “a playground of joy” following her demanding role in American Son, a dark drama about police racism. A star-strewn adaptation of a Broadway musical could be considered a departure for Washington, but in many ways it is her most politicall­y charged and stereotype-busting role yet. Via a series of high-energy, highcamp song-and-dance numbers, The Prom tells the story of Emma (played by Jo Ellen Pellman), a teenage lesbian in small-town Indiana who wants to attend the end-of-school party, just like everyone else. She can’t because the ultra-conservati­ve head of the PTA, Mrs Greene (Washington), has banned same-sex couples. It is a far cry from Washington’s own convention­al prom experience. “My date was my boyfriend, my high-school sweetheart, who I was madly in love with, and I wore a babydoll-shape dress in maroon silk with lace and embedded pearls – it was really pretty,” says Washington, who married NFL player Nnamdi Asomugha in 2013, with whom she has two children.

The Prom’s high-school homophobia is rooted in true stories (such as that of Constance McMillen in Fulton, Mississipp­i, in 2010), but so, too, is its satire of egomaniaca­l eastcoast liberals in search of an easy PR win. Having discovered Emma’s plight during a drunken late-night Twitter scroll, a band of Broadway stars (Meryl Streep, Nicole Kidman, James Corden and Andrew Rannells) swoop in to – in their eyes, at least – save the day. It is Washington, as Greene, who delivers the killer line: “Maybe you should stick to acting instead of activism?”

To be on the other end of that barb was a thrill for Washington. “I feel like people have said that to me my whole career! I’ve always been a really active person in the civic engagement, social justice space, so it was fun to try to wrap my head around the resistance to that.” For her, the rationale behind “celebrity activism” is straightfo­rward: “I don’t participat­e because I’m a person in the public eye; I do it because I’m an American. I’m never going to stop participat­ing in my democracy because of what I do for a living.”

She also appreciate­s that her casting as Greene introduces a humanising new layer to The Prom’s study of bigotry. “When Ryan called me and said: ‘I think I want you to play her, and here’s why,’ I knew why. I knew that, number one, this problem of homophobia within families, and parents not being able to accept their children, is an awful epidemic in the black community.” The offer contained an enticing opportunit­y, too: it is not often that a black woman gets cast as the perpetrato­r of discrimina­tion rather than its victim. Even in Washington’s prolific career, it is a first, but personal experience helped her to understand the character. “It’s different, but I could identify with the struggle of acceptance in my own family around my artistic calling. My mother’s nightmare was for me to be a starving actress. She felt, life is hard enough for you as a woman, as a person of colour; why would you take on this additional struggle? And I think a lot of parents feel that way about their LGBTQ kids, right? Why would you choose – as if it’s a choice – to make life even more difficult.”

For much of Washington’s childhood, her mother worked as a professor of education; her father was a real estate broker. They raised her in a comfortabl­e middle-class home in the Castle Hill neighbourh­ood of the Bronx, New York, but sent her to Spence, a private all-girls’ school on the Upper

East Side, at which Washington’s background was relatively humble. (For context, Gwyneth Paltrow was a pupil a few years ahead and the two performed in a singing group together.)

It was back home in Castle Hill, though, that the young Kerry gained an early understand­ing of the experience­s of LGBTQ+ people. Along with a prefame Jennifer Lopez, she took dance classes with a neighbourh­ood teacher, Larry Maldonado, and was deeply affected by his early death at the height of the HIV/Aids epidemic? “I always think of him whenever I find myself as an artist needing to advocate for myself, because he taught me that,” she says. Washington’s efforts at improving LGBTQ+ representa­tion, including playing a lesbian mother-to-be in Spike Lee’s 2004 film She Hate Me, and a transgende­r woman in the 2009 crime drama Life Is Hot in Cracktown, were recognised in 2015 with a Glaad award.

Unlike Emma, Washington, 43, says she never felt ostracised from any group, but the ability to fit in can lead you away from yourself in a different way. “I think my journey in life has been that I spent a lot of time trying to be who I thought other people expected me to be. It’s been less about going out and finding my people and more about allowing myself to be who I am.”

Looking back, she sees that the controvers­y surroundin­g the 1991 supreme court nomination of the African American judge Clarence Thomas was a milestone personally and profes

 ??  ?? Kerry Washington: ‘I’ve never been able to divorce political ideology from the choices I make as an actor.’ Photograph: Jay L Clendenin/Contour RA
Kerry Washington: ‘I’ve never been able to divorce political ideology from the choices I make as an actor.’ Photograph: Jay L Clendenin/Contour RA
 ??  ?? Washington as Della in the 2004 film Ray, which told the story of Ray Charles. Photograph: Universal/Kobal/Rex/Shuttersto­ck
Washington as Della in the 2004 film Ray, which told the story of Ray Charles. Photograph: Universal/Kobal/Rex/Shuttersto­ck

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